Cognitive Dissonance, Pessimism, and Behavioral Spillover Effects
This paper reports results from a unique two-stage experiment designed to examine the spillover effects of optimism and pessimism. In stage 1, we induce optimism or pessimism onto subjects by randomly assigning a high or low piece rate for performing a cognitive task. We find that participants receiving the low piece rate are significantly more pessimistic with respect to performance on this task. In stage 2 individuals participate in an ultimatum game. We find that minimum acceptable offers are significantly lower for pessimistic subjects, though this pessimism was generated in a completely unrelated environment. These results highlight the existence of important spillover effects that can be behaviorally and economically important - for example, pessimism regarding one’s initial conditions (e.g., living in poverty) may have spillover effects on one’s future labor market outcomes.
Year of publication: |
2007
|
---|---|
Authors: | Dickinson, David L. ; Oxoby, Robert J. |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, Appalachian State University |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Can Foreign Aid Buy Investment? Appropriation Through Conflict
Bruner, David M., (2009)
-
Cognitive dissonance, pessimism, and behavioral spillover effects
Dickinson, David L., (2007)
-
Cognitive Dissonance, Pessimism, and Behavioral Spillover Effects
Dickinson, David L., (2007)
- More ...